© Gilbert Patten WNU Service CHAPTER VIlI—Continued 13m On the road, he saw them pass over the crest of the hill, Inza still clinging fast to the saddle and Hodge urging his horse in the el- fort to overtake her. Frank talked to his horse, en- couraging him, and the creature seemed to understand. It took the hill grandly, It had stamina as well as speed. Ceming over the crest, Merry saw them again. Now Inza was fighting her frightened horse and Bart was gaining. Again Frank faster. And the splendid creature flew still faster. Then, above the staccato drum- ming of the animal's feet on the brown road, he heard another sound that gave his nerves a nasty jerk. It was the distant whistle of a loco- motive. The whistle of the Limited. There were crossing gates, of course, but Inza’'s horse, now crazed and blinded by terror, would crash into them unless stopped or turned. The picture of a frightful tragedy impending brought Frank's heart into his mouth. But Hodge was gaining fast now. He was close. Urging his mount with hand and voice, he was draw- ing alongside. He reached for the bridle of Inza's horse—and missed itt The animal he bestrode had swerved. Off he went to sprawl In the dust of the road. The Sabbath quiet of Fardale was shattered by the mad clattering of horses’ feet on the town's main street. Persons astir were electri- fied as they saw the runaway, with Inza still frantically fighting to check it, go tearing along that street toward the railroad cros They shouted or were shock as they saw the boy, his face white and with pursuing set, furi- greater efforts. The Limited, mile a minute, crossing. The crossing man saw away coming, with the pale-faced and almost exhausted girl fighting with the last bit of her ebbing strength to check the dened creature. He saw Frank Mer- whistled for the the lowered gate bars. And the flying Limited, roaring through Fardale, would reach the crossing a split-second after the run- away must hurtle head-on one of those bars. Even if the bar withstood shock, nothing could keep the girl from catapulting horse's head—over the bar and railroad track. The gate over the on tender gasped and was a useless, a ridiculous thing to do. Like puffing against a hurri- cane, But the long run had told on In- za’'s horse a little. Her last des- perate effort to check him slowed him up some. It was enough to let Frank come alongside. cried: “Lean this way! Let go! Now!" Until that moment she known he was in pursuit, but some- ly. her, dangling, tight against him as horse. They just missed the rear of the one motor car that had stopped some distance back from the gate. The Limited boomed over the crossing as horse, rider and res cued girl disappeared into a nar- row alleyway between two small wooden buildings. People were coming, on foot and in autos, breathless with excite- ment. They found the boy and girl at the end of the blind alley, which was cut off by a shed. He was standing on the ground, his arm still round the girl, holding her up. Near them stood the sweat-covered horse, its sides heaving, Frank was speaking to Inza as calmly as he could, which was hot very calmly; for now hé was very much shaken himself. He was tell- ing her she was all right, which he realized was quite needless to tell her. She was holding her shak- ing hands over her eyes, but she took them away and looked at him without saying a word. Nothing had ever happened in Fardale to cause quite such a sensa- tion as Frank's performance in snatching Inza off a runaway horse just before the animal crashed into the crossing gate and went down with a broken neck. The story of his battle with the mad dog had been given a kidding twist by Pete Smith that had caused skeptics to chuckle or scoff, but this was dif- ferent. Too many eye - witnesses were prepared to silence doubters. Merriwell took Inza home in Tony Accero's taxi after making sure the stout-hearted horse he had ridden would be taken back to Snodd’s. Hodge, covered with dirt and gasp- ing from his run, staggered up just as Frank was helping her into the car. ‘“‘Is—is she all right?’ Bart pant- ed. “I-—I tried to—"" “You did all you could to stop her horse,” Merry admitted. *1 saw you try." Inza was still too shocked and dazed to say anything at all, but before her home was reached she had recovered enough to warn Frank not to tell her father what ‘““He's an invalid,” was planation. ‘“‘He’s had breakdown and we don't let him hear anything that'll upset him in the least. We've never told him what happened that day in Mr. Snodd’'s grove. The doctor won't allow him even to read the news- papers.” Bernard Burrage was taking his daily afternoon rest in bed when and that “Now, Don't Forget, Not a Word to My Father.” Inza, nervous it easier for her own made who had feared condition might cause him to suspect some- “Now, don't forget, not a word to father, should he awaken, she pleaded. word,” repiied Frank. the being she with- some the truth from her Rist = NOL a For time of come frightened and run with her a nasty accident. “I'll tell her the whole of it later, Clayton left the room de would have left her then and but she asked him not to go so soon. “I've just got to have a talk with ly. “We've got our wires all crossed this rig and into something else. 1 won't be long.” It was queer, or maybe it wasn't, but he was willing enough to wait. he was beginning to think it that now little waiting. vealed herself to him as a widow and Mr. Burrage's sister. Of course Mrs. Clayton was nat- urally curious about the details of what had happened when Inza's horse ran with her, but he escaped seeming to be offensive by laugh- ingly saying he would let Inza tell it herself. She came down shortly in a dainty frock that had bewilderingly altered her appkarance. Outwardly at least, she had shaken off the shock of her un- pleasant adventure. “But I've forgotten all about Walter,” she said, laughing. “That's me, the champion forgetter. Some- body's sure to tell him about the runaway, and he'll turn a hand- spring. So I'm going to phone him now and let him know I'm all okay. I'll make it snappy, Frank.” Mrs. Clayton smiled as Inza danced lightly away into the next room to telephone. “She's always making things snappy,” she ob- served. ‘'‘She can turn a dull mo- ment into a blaze of fireworks when she wants to.” She excused herself now, and Inza found Merry alone in the library when she straight to him and gave him both of her warm hands. “Now,” she said, “we've got to find out where we go from here, and there's only one way to do it. I've got to talk to you about Bart Hodge. I want to tell you why I asked you to be friends with him.” Inza's words gave Frank a small jolt. She had kept him there to talk about Bart Hodge, and that was not so good. Almost anything else, he thought, would be better. She saw a faint cloud pass over his face and spoke again quickly: “Now don’t get me wrong, Frank. Wait till you've listened in on what I'm going to tell you.” She made him sit down again and then seated herself in front of him, where they could talk quietly and confidentially. “1 know what you've thought of my friendliness with Bart, for I'm not dumb even if you've imagined so." He flushed. reader? “I'm going to betray a confidence to you,” she went on frankly, “‘though I didn't mean to do so un- til today—until I heard you give Bart credit for doing his best to stop my runaway horse. That proved something to me, something I was pretty sure of before. It proved you're fair enough, generous enough, to give an enemy his just dues. And it makes you different from almost every other fellow 1 ever met." His flush deepened. “I've never found it gets you much to knock anybody, even an enemy,” he said. “Maybe I should have said, cially an enemy. For when knock an enemy people know you've got it in for him and the knock has Was she a mind- espe- tween the eves. should call it a plain bit of sense instead of generosity, Wall veil, I'm going to shoot at, Frank.” he was falling for the spell of it. “1 had to work fast to get a little to his heels and left you to “He very here to see me that and if ever a fel- was sunk he was. You can't how humiliated and ashamed he was, Frank. He came to say good-by, for he had made up came afternoon, He knew made himself look didn't have the he'd he just st what ke, and J 1 i 5 to burn him up my- waiting to do “1 was ready self. 1 was just That wa Then he told me that all his ever since he could remember, had had an dogs. It had made him dogs. And suddenly I understood, for I, too, am silly that way. I s why of dogs I know are perfectly harm- A ridiculous little Dachshund Isn't it at me. Frank!" “I know. I'm coming to them. appealed to his pride. quitter if he did that, not just a fellow with a silly fear of dogs. That was how 1 got under his skin to quit.” “But your brother said you were He said you “Well, I was. 1 go off the deep end that way sometimes, before I get all the angles on a thing. 1 hadn’t seen the newspaper then, and the way I heard it Bart had said the old dog was merely sick and not mad at all, but when I read it I found Silas Gleason had said that. Then I had another talk with Bart.” “Just turned yourself into a guardian angel, eh?" “I'm no angel, Frank. I'll never sprout wings. But I felt there was a mystery about him that I wanted to pry into. So I got out my pry and went to work. Maybe that wasn't nice, but I did it. Now, Frank, I'm going to tell you some things in strict confidence, and 1 wouldn't do it if I wasn’t sure you'll never spill one of them to another living soul—Bart much less than anybody." Merriwell was uncomfortable. He didn't feel like being made the sealed receptacle of Hodge's per- sonal secrets, but she went on swift- ly: “Already, before coming here, he'd made a flop in two schools, and that had turned his father against him. His dad's one of those narrow hide-bound men without un- derstanding or sympathy. I'd say he's a cold fish. “He inherited money and never did anything else to speak of. All his life he's been living by a pat- tern, and he gets sore because his son doesn't do so too. They don't hook up very 3art’s father never had a wild bone in his body, and so he can't get it when his only hopeful flies high and into a nose dive or a well, goes der “But “She's ink- Bart re t} 3 ir her trying.” u believe he's trying, In- you wouldn't be still “Then yc za?" “Sometimes, but handi- capped. He was brought up as a rich man’s son and he's apt to be That's the way [I size he's “Well, what--"' “Wait a minute, Frank. Let me lay it all on the first Jart went in for sports against the wishes of his father, who never took any interest in athletics. Now fa- ther lays Bart's flops to the time he's spent on football, baseball and other things outside the usual cur- riculum. And he's threatened that blow-out is going to be just too bad for Bart." “But I don’t see how | can" “But you can do a lot for Bart, and all you need to do now is over- iine his with him. He'll come I've seen signs of it has admitted to me ing straight round in time. He of fellow he figured you were." “But you've asked me to be friendly with him, Inza, and I can't imagine our ever getlling on that ’ “You never can tell what'll hap- pen, Frank. Don’t I know it! He ful queer look when you said so promptly he had done his best. The for him, but you can make it sound by telling how he tried. That'll soothe his fallen pride a lit- tle. Won't you do that much, at least?” Frank laughed now, his spontane- ous, infectious laugh. “Why, that'll be easy, Inza. And I'd do much more for you.” Laughing also, she flung out her hands again, impulsively, and caught his hands. “Now,” she said, “1 guess we've got those crossed wires all clear, Frank. Let's not get them snarled up again.” (TO BE CONTINUED) Sixteen million thunderstorms sweep the earth every year. Taking into account an average of 20 seconds between two lightning bolts, mankind must get used to the idea that 100 lightning flashes rip across the skies around this globe every second. These figures have been gathered by Dr. Popowsky, the German me- teorologist, reports a London United Press correspondent in the Phil- adelphia Inquirer. According to Dr. Popowsky, a thunderstorm is the result of a “thermic bubble” caused by sun- heated air quickly rising into the cooler heights of the heavens. Thunderclouds carry up to 300,000 tons of rain, sufficient to fill 6,000 big rail trucks. Two German scientists, Renard, and Hochschwender, have con- structed a “‘thunderstorm ma- chine.” They have estimated from it that tension accumulated in a large thun- dercloud could be anything up to 5,000,000,000 volts. This tension, together with elec- tric power quantities from 20.000 amperes, would suffice to supply a big country with electric power for a whole year if it could be collected and utilized. Two other scientists of the Berlin Institute of Physics, Lange and Ur. ban, have made efforts to collect huge energies contained in thunder- clouds for industrial power pur- poses. A huge wire netting was hung up between the slopes of a rocky valley in the north of Italy, which is noto- rious for severe thunderstorms. Electric energy accumulating in the air was conducted to two poles. A tension of 8,000,000 volts was gained which could be used to devel- op sparks 54 feet long. Attain Majority at Marriage In several states of this country, male and female minors, upon mar. riage, attain their majority, or the legal age which entitles them to manage their own affairs.—Collier’s Weekly Smart Fashions for | Daytime in Spring CHARMING basque frock for growing girls, and a house- dress for large figures, both] smart and becoming, both easy | to make. Even if you've done very little sewing, these patterns are easy to follow. Each one is-accompanied by a complete and detailed sew chart. And a tour through the shops will show you tible new fabrics make them up in. Basque Dress for Girls. wonder girls love a basque The fitted waist irrecis 4 irresi 0 No like this! igque g th or tub silk. The Patterns. gned for sizes 8, 8, 14 vears Size 8 ards of 39-inch nr des re- ate- : {f bias fold to neckline and yards ¢ sleeves s designed for sizes 36, 38, Size 38 38-inct material. ‘or contrasting collar, % yard, cut bias. Spring-Summer Pattern Book. 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